Location: Austin - Bergstrom International Airport
Type: Full Time
Salary: $32.23 – $40.29
Preferred Education:
4 Year Degree
Internal Number: COA092519
Performs a variety of moderately complex engineering and technical tasks in support of the Supervisory Control & Data Acquisition Baggage Handling System (SCADA-BHS). Supports 24/7 real-time BHS control system integrity and ensure the highest operational reliability and system availability. Leads the daily maintenance of the system to accomplish the best performance, communicates with dispatch, engineers and field crews, performs troubleshooting, problem analysis and resolution as required. Coordinates and analyzes the real-time control system user’s request, develops and implements enhancements or modifications requested in a timely manner. Communicates system activity status to customers and management. Perform application programming activities, including coding, testing, debugging, documentation and system modifications. Configures and programs process control applications (Human Machine Interfaces), Programmable Logic Controllers, and remove Terminal Unit functions. Updates, maintains, and documents security controls. Enforces security policies and procedures by administering and monitoring data security profiles.
Education and/or Equivalent Experience:
Graduation with a Bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university with major course work in a field related to the installation and maintenance of process control systems, electronic security systems, network communications, or computer and peripheral equipment.
Experience may substitute for education up to four (4) years.
Austin–Bergstrom International Airport or ABIA is a Class C international airport located in Austin, Texas, United States, and serving the Greater Austin metropolitan area, the 34th-largest metropolitan area in the United States. Located about 5 miles southeast of Downtown Austin, it covers 4,242 acres and has two runways and three helipads. It is on the site of what was Bergstrom Air Force Base. The airport and air force base were named after Captain John August Earl Bergstrom, an officer who served with the 19th Bombardment Group. The airport replaced Robert Mueller Municipal Airport as Austin's main airport. The Austin-Bergstrom International Airport is run by the City of Austin Aviation Department. We’re here to provide Austin-style quality service for travelers at Austin-Bergstrom International Airport. We work 24 hours a day, seven days a week to ensure a safe, clean, friendly, efficient and sustainable airport. To us, sustainability means developing the airport in a way that meets the needs of the present without compromising the needs of future generations. We have identified four key areas that we believe to be the foundation of this sustainability: customer and community ...value, operational excellence, economic sustainability, and environmental stewardship. Austin-Bergstrom International Airport embodies Austin, a city known for its distinctive character, its hospitality, and, of course, its music. We are part of the community it serves, and we are just one of the many faces of our community’s culture and character. The airport is governed by the Austin City Council and proudly contributes to the City of Austin’s mission of being the best-managed city in the country. Together, we are working toward making Austin the most livable place in the country. Austin-Bergstrom International Airport opened on May 23, 1999. Although the airport is relatively new, the Aviation Department has decades of experience. In 1958, it began overseeing Austin's city-owned airport operations and maintenance. The Department has operated as a self-supporting entity since 1972. The airport does not receive any general fund subsidy and has entirely paid its general obligation debt issued from airport-generated funds.